The Vision: Design That Knows What Not to Say
D.C. Johnson is a nationally recognized custom jeweler serving an exceptionally discerning clientele. When the brand came to Crimson, the brief wasn’t about spectacle — it was about ease. The showroom needed to do one thing above all else: create an environment where clients feel immediately at ease making intimate, high-value decisions.
Unlike traditional retail interiors designed for volume and visibility, this space was intentionally crafted to support a slower, more personal buying experience. Every choice was considered through the lens of the client journey, from arrival to consultation, reinforcing confidence and calm at each step.

The Details Doing the Quiet Work
Tufted royal-blue velvet doors and butterscotch leather chairs set a warm, private tone from the entry. Dark mahogany display cases and chandeliers faceted like emerald-cut diamonds echo the brilliance of the pieces inside them — a detail David Johnson connected with immediately.



National Recognition
In 2019, the showroom earned a feature in Robb Report, which described the design as bringing “the feeling of Madison Avenue to the Midwest.” The piece highlighted the tufted velvet doors, mahogany cases, and stocked bar and lounge as signature details — and positioned the space as a benchmark for modern luxury retail design.
“As long as I can remember, watches have always been a part of my life,” says owner David Johnson, a third-generation jeweler whose brother Brian, the in-house master goldsmith, does repairs on-site. It’s that legacy — craftsmanship, discretion, trust — that the showroom was designed to reflect.


Full Circle: Watching the Design Work in Real Time
On June 30, Crimson and D.C. Johnson co-hosted a happy hour inside the showroom for a group of D.C. Johnson’s clients and VIPs. Guests gathered exactly where the space was built for them to gather: at the bar, trying on pieces in the mirror, lingering in conversation long after a typical happy hour would have wound down.
That’s the moment that stuck with us. A press feature tells you a room photographs well. A room full of relaxed, unhurried guests tells you it works.



















